Carnegie Corporation of New York has funded work to address a variety of important issues. Move your mouse over the letters below for a list of issues and links to corresponding content.

Achievement Gap

Carnegie Corporation of New York addresses issues related to the Achievement Gap -- the gap in academic achievement that persists between minority and disadvantaged students and their white counterparts -- through the following programs:

Biological Weapons (Bioweapons)

Carnegie Corporation of New York has funded work to address issues related to biological weapons (bioweapons). While this work is no longer considered part of our current strategic focus and no longer receives funding, you may want to review recent Carnegie Corporation publications related to bioweapons on our Publications page including:
Crafting Policies to Control Biological Weapons (Carnegie Review, 2009) and
Biosecurity: A 21st Century Challenge (Carnegie Challenge Paper, 2005).

Campaign Finance Reform

Carnegie Corporation of New York addresses issues related to campaign finance reform through the following programs:

Disarmament

Early Childhood Development

Carnegie Corporation of New York has funded work to address issues related to Early Childhood Development. While this work is no longer considered part of our current strategic focus and no longer receives funding, you may want to review past Carnegie Corporation publications related to Early Childhood Development.

Education Accountability

Carnegie Corporation of New York addresses issues related to education accountability through the following programs:

Voting

Publications Search

How to Search

The publications search tool allows you to find recent publications as well as documents dating back to 1982. Search for publications by program area, year, or topic. Click on items to reveal further information and download PDFs for review and printing.

Investing in Africa's Next Generation of Academics and University Leaders

Libraries and Information

Higher Education in Eurasia

Urban and Higher Education

Building Knowledge and Affecting Policy

New Designs for Education Systems

Opportunity Equation

Standards and Assessments

Strengthening Human Capital

Democracy and Civic Integration

Immigrant Civic Integration

Voter Engagement

Future of Journalism Education

Dissemination

Carnegie Scholars

Special Opportunities

Year

Title

Type

Download

Winter 13

Beyond Boundaries: A Promising New Model for Security and Global Development

Carnegie Results

Citation:

Theroux, Karen. Beyond Boundaries: A Promising New Model for Security and Global Development. Rep. New York: Carnegie Corporation of New York, 2013. Print.

Program:

International Peace and Security

Subprogram:

Nuclear Security

In 2007, a team of international security experts and researchers at the Henry L. Stimson Center launched an initiative to build an effective model for sustainable nonproliferation of biological, chemical, and nuclear weapons. The project represented an exciting and innovative way of thinking about security: a “dual-use” approach that operated at the nexus of the security and development communities. The team’s ingenuity paid off. After less than six years, the Stimson Center is phasing out its involvement in the successful program, which will now be government funded. This Results shows how a novel idea, supported with modest grants from Carnegie Corporation, went on to secure millions in support from international sources, achieving real-world policy wins.